Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 14, 1883, Page 7

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THE DAILY BEE--WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1883, by 1883, 4 mmense Sale! {CIETS D ORY Gonns —AT S Commencing Thursday, 3 \ / Harkness B COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA. ‘Nov. 1. Carpets at 18c, worth 80¢ per yard. Ingrain Carpets at 45c, worth 60c. Tapestry Brussels at 60c¢, worth 90c. Best quality Body Brussels at $1.15 worth $1.40. 1,000 yards Canton Matting, at 20c, worth 30c, less than can be imported to-day Ingrain Carpets at 22c, worth 35c. OUR NEBRASKA CUSTOMERS WILL FINDIT TO THEIR INTEREST T0 EARLY EXANINE THESE GOODS. Our Skilled Workmen will Make - in Council Bluffs, and Lay ‘Carpats in Omaha ‘at the swme Price as BARGAINS IN COTTON! i 50 Pieces Bleached Muslin at 6¢, worth 9c, 60 Pieces Unbleached Muslin at 6ic, worth 10c. Canton Flannels at 5¢, worth 10c, Heavy Cotton Flannel at 12lc, Prints 3¢, worth Ge. Cloaks Latest Style [{} {3 [{4 50.00’ [{4 (1} 1] [{} [{] 6.00, [{3 [{3 worth 16e¢. : IDolmans for $75.00, priced elsewhere $125.00. 75.00. 9.00. 10 Dozen Blaclk Jersey Jaclkets, we will offer at $2.50 each, sold elsewhere for $4.00. OUR STOCK I8 COMPLETE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT OF - SIS, Dress Goods, Cloakings, Plushes Velvels AND OFFERED AT AT PRICES THAT WILL DEFY COMPETITION, Omaha and Nebraska customers purchasing bills of $10 and pwards, will receive transportation both ways, Towa customers will save their transportation by calling at : HARKNESS BROTHERS, 401 Broadway, Council Bluffs, Iowa., | Z“cc“Eus F“flm llnl“IE' ‘Innd keep the corn cool. If this be theprin- ciple, then the plan somotimes practicod lof throwing rails into the erib to allow | the nir to pass through will not do as good work for us as will some device that will allow the air to pass upward freely | from bottom and out at the top. ; Wo take two slats, three inches by one inch, as long as the orib is deep. We nail on the edges of these two slabs cross picces of inch boards six inches long, | Robbed of a Trip to Earope by & “Friend.” | An Acauaintance Formed at St Louis Results Disasterously |placing them four feot apart, On theso | h cross pioces wo nail two slats three inchos in a Bowery Hotel, wide, and we have an open box ten or | . twelve foot long and six inches square, Hurried Dopavture. on at each end; and along the four cor ners there is an inch space. his we call a ventilating shaft, or ventilator. When | we begin to fill a crib we set one of these | Zacelious Whitworth camo to Now York | in the erib, half way from each sido and lnst Thursday night about 10 o'clock and | i front of the window where the corn came to grief in five breaf hours thore. | (118 from the scoop, as there is where | after. Whethor, like his patronymic in |©0™ packs tho closest and heats tho scriptural lore, he climbed a troe or not is [300n0st. In a crib thicty.six feet long unknown, but that he is now ‘up a tree,” | 414 six foct wide we have three windows, in common parlance, will bo seen from the |41 we use threo such vontilators, reach. rocord of his advontures, Somo woeks | it from tho floor to the roof, and the ago ho left his home in Ceskilou county, | free cireulation of airand ready escapo California, with a large drove ef sheep, [°f heated air prevents mold or “heating | McAdame's New York Journal, Nov, 10th secking to market thom at Laramio, Wy- oming Torritory, A plodding, woary journey over he found himself at his de- stination on Sunday, October 28, Ho at | onco epened negotiations with dealers in South Down chiops and hides, all wool a yard wide. The whole lot of stock was readily sold for §2,600 in crisp notes and gold, which the joyous possessor took at once to the Laramie Bank,and purchased therewith a draft on Liverpool for £5 12, intending to enjoy a trip to the old coun: try, if not to locate there. A stop-over ticket tor New York was Dbought, and the happy ranchman at once | set out for the Mecea of his hopes. A delay of a few days on the road added City was reached Monday last. At t point a pleasant but needy young mdn cawe upon the train, wishing to go to Now York., He not, in fact, sufti- cient funds to pay his fave, and Mr. Whitworth very Kkindly advanced the | requisite amount, so interested did e | become in his new acquaintance. In| fact, the young man was no_less a per- sonage than William St. J., MoAdams, of St. Louis, nephew of the captain of the | Park police of New York—so he said. The recently acquired friend | was_soon on the best of terms with | the Westernranchman, .\ medium-sized man, he of benign face and facile tongue, in‘age apparently under thirty years. When they reached the metropo- lis Thursday evening they went to the | Van Dyke House, the Bowery and | Bayard street, where both gave specimens | of their ehirography and were assigned to | room No, 5, Mr. Whitworth footing the bill. A pleasant stroll through the Dow- | ery and its adjacent boulevards was the next thing on'the card. The clerk of tho | hotel says that the gentlemen returned about the solemn hour of midnight redo- lont with the perfume of mountain e | The friends retired to their apartment, | and Mr. Whitworth ignored pass events from that time until o'clock yol cerd;\{ morning, when he awoke, Mr. MeAdams was missing, and the draft of | £512 and $58 in currency had also van- | ished. The young man had told Mr. Whitivorth that he at times worked in a | cigar factory in the neighborhood of the | hotel, but inquiry there failed to give | | any information concerning him. Caplain | Beatty, of the Park police, is not| related to the person who claimed such | close ties with the ofticer. The unfortu- nate vietim of this peculation had not money enough to telegraph his loss to Laramie. Ashe told his story to Captain Petty, of the Fifth Precinct, he was quite overcome. He is a swarthy, sunbrowned.| man with dark tangled beard and speaks with the accent common in the north of Ireland, The clerk at the Van Dyke House said it was not uncommon for guests to leave at any time of night and no track was kept of them if their bills had been paid, and he thought no blame could possibly be attached to the house. — The Poor Ye Have Always, H. O. Flanders, Supt. of the Alms |} House, Weare, N. H., cortifies: *‘A helpless, afflicted woman, bed-ridden for five years, by the use of the great pain- banisher, St. Jacobs Oil, now gets from her bed and knits stockings.” Cnibing Corn, The depreciationin the valueofthe corn rop, from the time it is put in the cribs until it i3 fed out, or removed to market, would, if prevented, be a handsome profit to the business, One of the first requisites to prevent fermentation when thrown into bulk, is to arrange for free civculation of air through the corn and cribs, This may be pretty effectually provent- ed by leaving on a large amount of husks and silks, and if these are moist from dew or rain one has first-class conditions for the corn to heat and mold in the crib, Hired men and careless farmers wlio have known crops of corn to keep woll even when the crib is filthy with trash, silks and husks, console themselves in the con- tiuance of their negligence and untidy habits by the remembranco of crops that haye kept well in spite of silks and Liusks and corn blades abundant in the crib, When they have received damage from heating corn, they have attributed it to the unfavorable weather, and not to the miserable, slovenly manner of cribbing the corn, We have seen one farmer crib corn in October andnot havels moldy grain or cob in the crib; and a neighbor with equall goodandaswoll matured corn lose the bul of it from heating in the crib, simply be- cause one put in clean corn, and the other did not have his free from silks and trash, so that the air could pass freely through the corn, and there was no surplus moisture stored with the trash in the crib, It pays to form the habit of husking clean, "It is all a matter of habit. Filth; huskers and slovenly farmers do not rri{ any more corn in_a season or accomplish any more work than they who habituate themselves to doing all tfm work as thor- oughly and well as they know how. 1t does not pay to be in 8o big u hurry to finish the day's work, or the season's work, as that the work can not be done in the best manner, * The piles of silks and husks at the win- dow will not only induce heating of the mass of corn, but invite rats and mice to barbor there, to destroy from ten to twenty percent of the year's labor, But, as long as the weather coutinues warm, and the corn damp and cobs full of sap, the absence of silks and husks may not fw enough to save it. We have found it pays to ecrib only clean corn, and also to put in veritilators i through the mass of corn. Our plan is | simple and effectual. When corn heats | in bulk, the gas and heated air will tend to rise, and not settle or dissipate through the sides and bottom of the crib. the gas and warm air can ascend | freely, they will carry out with them much moisture, but the main thing is the frec escape which will reduce temperature | | common fencing, a little variety to the trip, and Kansas | 2 | turers are growing riche of the corn, Tho devico is quickly made by ripping Two fence boards will makea ventilator. They will last as long a3 the crib, if taken care of, and will ef- fectually vontilato the corn and pay for their cost in ono year. Let there be care now to ventilate the corn that is going into cribs, or there will rapid decline in the value of the its temperature vises during the rtnight. Good sound corn is valu. able feod, but moldy, heated corn is poo trash. Better let it rot in the field than in tho crib, but a little care will prevent loss in cither place. | — The “Exposition Universello do Vart Culi- | wire” awarded the hignest honoms to Angos- tura Bitters as the most efficacions st lant to excite the appetite and to keep the di- tive orvans in good order, Ask for the gen- uine artic manufactured only hy Dr, J 3 13, Siogert & Sons, and boward of i - | ——— The Shoemakers on Protection, The Lynn (Mass.) Bee, organ of the workmen in the boot and sho manufac- |, turing industry of that city ina recent issue said There is a large and increasi of laboring mev in this v y who be- lieve the high protective systom now in vogue, and which neither party has the | courage to remedy, a gigantic humbug. They haye been told at every election that tho duties aro kept at their prosent | high workingmen's interests and secure them high wages. They find that this is the : cheapest kind of talk, and that the man- ufacturers who are active and earnest, who spend efforts and money to secure protection for their particular industries, are nothing near so anxious to give their number employes good wages, They are beginning to ask pertinent and hard questions. Workingmen would like to have it explained, if high dutics are for their especial pro- tection, how comes it that the manufs d the work- ingmen poorer/ By catering to the most narrow and senseloss of all prejudices among Americans—the native American sentiment and prejudice against foreign- ers—the advocates of protection have been enabled to win the workmen's ap- plause and steal their money at the same time. But they are beginning to inquire where the justice is in throwing the mar- ats of the world open to employers to e R possible rates, which they are constantly taking advan- tage of, while these samo markets by un- just legislation are practically closed to them. By legislation the workmen are torced to pay for important articles of food and clothing in soma instances double the natural price. This calliug them dear workmen just before election and selling them extremely dear mer- chandise the balance of the year is a transparent farce that is beginning to be appreciated, e Whether you pref Dracing wountain uir for you should not omi e or the uer vacation ourself with a XKeep an Eye on Them, Kansas City Journal, Bank clorks and store clerks who fre- quent disreputable resorts—as many of them do nightafter night—are not worthy of trust, and their employers ought to bo sharp enough to know it. FOUNDIN A BOX. { Augusta, Me., writes, May ‘Lhave been afllicted for some ars with a severe Kidiey troublo,and having noticed an articlein one of our papers of th Hunt’s Renedy had performed in many case sy, Dhdder and kidney troubles, and findi ina box of straw packing, 1 concluded I would try it, and commenced to tako it, when, to surprise, 1 found that the first bottle henefited me so tauch that 1 de. cided that T would continne its usc, and 1 kept on taking it wntil 1had used in ll six Lottles, appetite Is zood, all pains in the back peared, and forone of my years (1 an old) T am able to attend to 1y busin strong and Mz, John Kis 10,1583, as lo sonderful cures of drop. + ottle years 5 and am rous, a3 many of my friends and nelghbors can tostify that know me well. 1heg to statc also, that many of oue ne 3 have used Tunt's Remedy with equally and one of my tricnds who bias just purchased a bottle of Gup ) Kinsman & Alden, of Portland, says he ‘would not bo without it at any p oln street Lewlston, Ihave been soverely afiicted for a long time with [ndigestion and liver complaiut, and at times all that I ato so distressed wethat I could not bear the sight of food. I had tried a good many different remedies for my com- plaint, and they allfailed, until one day Mr, Martel, one of our druggists in Lewiston, recommended Hunt's Remedy, 88 he knew of.80 many who had used it here with great success for kiduey, liver, and ur- inary troubles, as well as indigestion, and upon his recommendation 1 finally concluded to try a bottle, and commenced tak with very little faith in it The first bottle helped we 50 much that 1 purchased two more, and it has done nie & wonderful amount of good and cured wo of indigestion. I can eat all kinds of food now, and can truly recommend Hunt's a8 & sure cure Loriudigostion, liver and kid- ney discases." PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE. Mr. Geo. D. Bates, of No. ton, Me , a reliable and proy the followlng information, May 14, 1583 learned of the valuable qualitics of Hunt's Remedy in practical mannier, I beg to state that 1 consider it & remedy of great merit, sud can most cheerfully recommend it to say one troubled with kidney or liver disease.” Cottage Strect, Lewls nt citizen, imparts (Ouioaco, NrmwAvuKEE Noctnm and unreasonable rate to protect | Northe! e tions reach all the Northy 1 Far answors the descrip it uto betwoon Chic ineapolis. URNITURE; CHEAPEST PLACE IN OMAHA TO BUY Furniture IS AT DEWEY & STONES They always have the largest and best stock. NO STAIRS TO CLIMB] ELEGANT PASSENGER “" ELEVATOR 'TO THE DIFFERENT FLOORS Granite Ironware. B‘O l V BOILING, PRESERVING, ._[S‘ LIGHT, HANDSOME, o WHOLESOME, DURABLE. The Best Ware Made for the Kitehen, MANUFACTURED ONLY BY THE ST. LOUIS STAMPING COMPANY, ST, LOUIS, v all Stave, Hardware. and Hnuxnmrnixhir}g D@]fnr@fi Tar Sale 1o torm ** Shor tion with the Tho uso of th o roquired a lic—n Shett Line, and the best ot ace ® tions. of which are shed by the greatest railway in Awerica. turn And St. Paul. 1t owns and operates over 4,500 miles of road n Nlinois, Wisconsin, Minuosots, lowa and Uranches and connoe ros of the L t4 my and Winona, Aberdeon and Ellendalo an Claire and Stillwater* Wansau and Chicago, Milwau Chicago, Milwaukee, Chicago, Milwauke hicag: it, Janosvillo and Minoral Poln, Rockford and Dubiuque. ar Raplia. Yankton amberlain. Bluffs and O Sioux Fall M WILBOR'S COMPOUND OF PURE COD LIVER OIL AND LIME. Davenport, Calmar, St Pullman Sleeners and the Finost Dining Cars Inth VOl e run 1 ain lines of the MILWAUKEE & ST: PAUL RAILWAY and every atteition i paid £ passengers by courte ous employes of the company. sons who have been taking Cod-Liver Oil that Dr. Wilbor has ous_of several profes- 3 N P R rl}‘c',‘.fifl:'f"k'm. will be pleased to lears GEO H. HEAFFORD, coeded, from direct . of § Ass't Gen'l Pass. Ag't | gional gentlemen, in combining the pure Oil and 1 o manner that it is pleasant to the taste, and its effects in Lung complaints are truly wonderful. Very many persons whoso cases were pronounced hopeless, and who had taken the clear Oil for a long time without marked effect, have been entirely cured Dy using this preparation. Bo sure andl ct the genuine, Manufactnred only by A. §."Witton, Chemist, Boston, Sold. by all druggists. 8.8 M RILY, Gen'l Maunager. J.T. CLARK, Gen'l Sup't. Beware of the continued use of mereury and potash for the treatment of Bloodand Skin discasos—they cure, and nearly always injure or totally ruin the general health, A WELL-KNOWN DRUGGIST. -0 tore was the first to sull Swiit's § o, quart bottles which wold for ever Nebl:aéka corhice —AND— Omamental Works ! MANUFACTURERS OF GALVANIZED [RON CORNICES- Dormoeor Windovwvws, FINIALS, WINDOW CAPS, TIN, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING, PATENT METALIC SKYLIGHT, Ilron Fencing! Balustrad das, OfMco and Bank Windoy Cellar Guards, Ete. . NINTH AND JONE WA GAISER, Manager. 'DR. WHITTIER, 617 St. Charles St., St, Louis, Mo. REGULAR GRADUATE of two modical colloges 2\ has been engaged Jonger In the treatment of CHILONIC, NERVOUS, SKIN AND BLOOD Discases than other physician in St. Lou ty papers show and all old_rosidents kuow. Consultation free and Whon it s inconyeniont o visit tho cty chicken-pox, but leter found it to be some | treatment, medicines hicken-pox, but leter ":nn.‘:.m::h Sesanb modol oo hottio | exisis it is frankly mall doses the satis- well, T am s0 o hor that T sh hut T shall adu it myself. W, E. Browre, M. D, Our trcatise on Blood and 8kin Diseases mailed free to applicants. My dr 1t was then put up £0.00 cac © nox by its use, e w f R It cures fair and rosy. word as fail, ithstood other ercurial and oth As for 1t cures sorts of treat- troubles 5 ] cures, DRY TETTER, icted with Dry Tetter of the of the For years I was , aid the rosalt was as In o fow menths et Voisoning a well inan—and due rers should wisville, Ky. clan Says. Cyviess Rinor, Moxnor s and in g f whe was practic other children and't THE SWIFT SPECIFIC €O, Drawer i, Atlanta Wester Cornice-Works, C. SPECHT, PROP. Omaba, Neb, 200 pagon; the whole storywell tol. Many recelpts; wh GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878, Brsakfst Cooe, Warrauted absolutely pur? Cocoa, from which tho cxcoss or 1111 Douglas 5t. (3t Y Oil has been removed. It Lius thres with Btarch, Arrowroot or ugar, and is therefore far more ceonomi- cal. It is deliclous, nourishing, strengthening, caslly digosted, and admirably adapted for invalids as ‘well a8 for persons in health, MANUFACTURER OF Galvamzea Iron Cornices Tin, Iron and Slate Metallio Skylight, Patent 7 i NN 80ld by Grocers everywhere, 3 irgoecs on endi Geontiney, mabatradin, voranias ion wang | s BAKER & (0., Dorchester, Mass. Cellar Guards; also general Mianigs, Window Blind it fof Poorsonts THil" atent naido DR, HENDERSON, Wyandottesit | years' practice KANSAS OITY, MO, | Chicago, Authorized by the state to tres Ghironic, Nervoussud Private discases, Asthma, Epllopsy, Rheumatism, Piles ry and Bkin Dis ‘easos, Sominal Weaknoss (blight loeses) Boxual Debility (loss nf sexual power) uaranteed or money refunded. Charget (ow. Thousainls of casos cured. No injurions medi sines furnished even to patients b sultation free and confidential —call or write; age and experionco axe important. A BOOK for both soxes— Husirated—ud circulars of othor things sent sealed or wo 8 oont stampa, FREEMUSEUNM o RBO*\T -*'Parta of the bl |£‘»|, enlirzal, dev \.]n}:vul strengticned, I , 13 an interesting adsortisement long run in our Blind. Cure without med- A POS: e ot tober 1 6. One box No, 1 will enre any caseln feur days or less. No. 2 will cure the most ol ate case no matter of how long standing. Allan’s Soluble Medicated Bougies subbs, copabla, or oll of san- in to' produce” dyspupaia, by A ar graduste s M\Ilmm Oefl slxteen —twolve In dal wood, that are dostroylig tho cuatingsof the Sold by all dr For further PO, “«llc B:l. LAN c i Junnkmfi. e A oply t0 I o of humbug about this. highly circulars i ioy o Modical C

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